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Are gerunds the same as present participles?

Are the gerunds the same as present participles? Like synonyms? Or is there something that distinguishes one from the other? For example, are gerunds only used as nouns and present participles only used as part of the verb?

For example, "biking" used as a gerund would be:
I like biking.

And "biking", as a present participle:
At the moment, he's biking to his friend's house.

So, basically, in the second example, "biking" would not be considered a gerund. Or would it?

Re: Are gerunds the same as present participles?

Originally Posted by huacheetah

Are the gerunds the same as present participles(Yes in form, both ending with -ing) but not in usage? Like synonyms? Or is there something that distinguishes one from the other? For example, are gerunds only used as nouns and present participles only used as part of the verbor an adjective?

For example, "biking" used as a gerund would be:
I like biking.

And "biking", as a present participle:
At the moment, he's biking to his friend's house.

So, basically, in the second example, "biking" would not be considered a gerund. Or would it?

Thanks in advance.

(Not a teacher)
A sleeping car = a car for sleeping (Gerund as a noun)
A sleeping baby = a baby who is sleeping (Present participle used as an adjective)
A baby is sleeping: Present participle used as part of the verb.

Re: Are gerunds the same as present participles?

Originally Posted by huacheetah

Are the gerunds the same as present participles? Like synonyms? Or is there something that distinguishes one from the other? For example, are gerunds only used as nouns and present participles only used as part of the verb?

Essentially you have it: a gerund is an -ing form that serves a partially, or completely, nominal (i.e. noun-like) function. Essentially there are two types that can usefully be distinguished: a PLAIN GERUND simultaneously possesses both verbal and nominal aspects. E.g. in

Secretly smoking cigarettes is unwise.

, the word 'smoking' functions both like a noun in that it serves as the subject of the verb 'is' , yet also like a verb in that it both governs a direct object (cigarettes) and takes adverbial modification (secretly).

However, in
The shooting of the suspect caused an uproar.

gerund 'shooting' (still serving a nominal function) is devoid of its verbal powers: no object can be inserted here (instead there is an objective genitive phrase 'of the suspect' to supply this information) and any modification of it could be achieved only by an adjective, e.g.

The sudden shooting of the suspect caused an uproar.

and not an adverb

(* The suddenly shooting...)

Such gerunds as this, most typically prefixed by the definite article, are usually termed VERBAL NOUNS.

Participles, on the other hand, combine the essential powers of verb and adjective. Thus e.g. in

(Not a teacher)
A sleeping car = a car for sleeping (Gerund as a noun)
A sleeping baby = a baby who is sleeping (Present participle used as an adjective)
A baby is sleeping: Present participle used as part of the verb.

A useful point! Attributive gerunds (as in 'sleeping car') are distinguished from attributive participles (as in 'sleeping baby') only in terms of pronunciation, with phrase stress in the former (naturally) falling on the gerund, but in the latter on the noun itself.

Re: Are gerunds the same as present participles?

In a former life, perhaps a century or two ago, I seem to remember a mean old grammar teacher stressing that the difference between the gerund and gerundive is similar in Latin and English: the gerund behaves as a noun "Skiing is great fun" while the gerundive behaves more like a verb "She cracked her head open skiing, so I've always been afraid of skiing."

So the gerundive is fairly similar to a participle, which participates in verb formation.